How the Michigan Freedom of Information Act works
Michigan's Freedom of Information Act (MCL 15.231 et seq.) grants any person the right to inspect, copy, or receive copies of public records of state agencies and local public bodies, including municipalities, counties, and school districts. The law applies to the executive branch and local government, but notably exempts the Legislature and the Governor's office, a widely criticized gap in transparency coverage. Agencies must respond within five business days, with a possible 10-day extension upon notice.
Fees may be charged for labor, duplication, and mailing, but the Act provides for a 50% fee reduction if a requester demonstrates the denial or delay was not reasonably justified. Willful and intentional violations are subject to civil fines of $2,500 to $7,500 per occurrence. Common exemptions include certain personnel records, attorney-client communications, law enforcement investigative records, and records constituting a clearly unwarranted invasion of privacy. Disputes are resolved in circuit court.
Prefer to file yourself? Visit the official Michigan portal ↗
All Michigan agencies (27)
Every Michigan agency we file public records requests with. Click an agency to start a request.
General Government (27)
- Calhoun County
- City of Ann Arbor
- City of Battle Creek
- City of Dearborn
- City of Detroit
- City of Flint
- City of Grand Rapids
- City of Holland
- City of Kalamazoo
- City of Lansing
- City of Monroe
- City of Pontiac
- City of Saginaw
- City of Warren
- Eaton County
- Genesee County
- Ingham County
- Kalamazoo County
- Kent County
- Livingston County
- Macomb County
- Monroe County
- Oakland County
- Ottawa County
- Saginaw County
- Washtenaw County
- Wayne County
